WOW

From left, MaryChris Williams ’99, Emily Metz ’99, and Jennifer Ullman ’99 get together during a break at the biennial Women of Ohio Wesleyan event last November.


NYC Rock Tour

Rock and Melissa met with hundreds of alumni during a farewell Rock Tour to cities across the country. Pictured at the New York event are, front row: Acadia Caryl ’22, Marilyn Baer ’14, Bhavna Murali ’12, Sara Hollabaugh Serbanoui ’17, Sarah Hartzheim ’14, Billy Lewis ’21; back row: Malcolm Clark ’14, Roni Cody ’22, Martin Clark ’14, Rock Jones, Michael Serbanoiu ’15, Lucas Nathanson ’22, and Mohammad Niazi ’22. See more photos from Rock Tour events.


Door Crashers

Alpha Phi Alpha brothers, from left, Kenneth Williams Jr. ’08, Aaron Granger ’93, Daniel Sturkey ’84, (and from other colleges) Aaron Martin, Simeon Frazier, Eric Pannell, and Malik Ferguson meet at the Slocum Dedication, where this door is part of the OWU history display in the Reading Room. Seven men were granted a charter in 1982 to form OWU’s Omicron Rho Chapter of the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, the nation’s oldest historically Black fraternity. Shattered in seven pieces and then reassembled, the door represents the fraternity breaking through and becoming part of the fabric of OWU.


Naples Rock Tour

Alumni celebrating at the Naples, Florida, stop on the Rock Tour included, from left, Eric Hursh ’70, Carolee Turner O’Hara ’70, Belinda (Binney) Brown Fouts ’73, Kathleen O’Hara Hursh ’73, David Fouts ’73, and Richard Sterrett ’73See more photos from Rock Tour events.


Homecoming

The undefeated 1967 football team was inducted into the OWU Athletics Hall of Fame as a Team of Distinction during Homecoming weekend. Teammates on hand to receive the honor included, from left, back row: Vern Venne ’68, Tom Trumble ’68, Jim Wallar ’70, Dick Faulkner ’68, Bill Long ’69, Bart Drake ’68, Bob Amoruso ’68; front row: Tom Liller ’71, Tom Kaiser ’70, Atilia Daray ’70, Clendon (Jay) Parr ’70, Larry Fedak ’68, and Ed Kurent ’68.


Gospel Lyres Choir Reunion to Make a Joyful Noise

Soon after arriving at Ohio Wesleyan for her freshman year, Marteal Pitts ’76 realized she missed the music she grew up singing in church. Then, one day before dinner in Smith Hall, she was thrilled when she heard Cheryl Smith Benefield ’74 playing familiar music on the piano, and she joined a couple of other students to sing a few favorite hymns and gospel songs.

The Gospel Lyres perform at their 1976 spring concert.

That impromptu singalong in 1972 turned into the makings of the Gospel Lyres, a choir that became a mainstay of spiritual and social connections for a host of African American students at Ohio Wesleyan. To commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Gospel Lyres’ first concert performance, a reunion concert will take place during Homecoming & Family Weekend, Oct. 6–7.

Marteal says her encounter with Cheryl sparked an idea to organize OWU’s first gospel choir. Marteal and Cheryl posted flyers around campus to spread the word, and they were shocked when nearly 30 students arrived for the first meeting in the basement of Smith.

“It blew my mind,” Marteal says. “They kept coming. I had never seen that many Black students at one time on campus.”

The 1973 spring concert in Chappelear Drama Center was the culmination of months of organizing, planning, and rehearsing. As cofounders, Cheryl served as the choir’s first pianist and Marteal, who had never led a choir before, became its inaugural director.

The Gospel Lyres was “a place to belong and connect,” Cheryl says. “There was a sense of belonging and acceptance. You could utilize your God-given talents and gifts.”

The choir also provided an opportunity to bring together Black students, who were few among the total student population, Marteal says. “To sing that music was like having church. Getting lost in the harmonies and flowing with those familiar sounds was soothing. To see that camaraderie let me know there were others like me who grew up in the church. It was inspiring.”

The Gospel Lyres’ numbers and reputation grew over the years, and they branched out to perform at various Delaware churches as an unofficial OWU ambassador. The choir also performed in other cities, including Philadelphia, New York, and Cleveland, to sing. “The word on the street was that we were polished,” Marteal says.

Marteal considers her tenure with the Gospel Lyres a sacred experience. As the 50th anniversary of the first concert approached, she reached out to alumni to help her plan a reunion of the choir, although the group no longer exists at OWU today.

“I’m saddened that something that strong and vibrant fizzled out because no one had the passion for it,” Marteal says. She hopes the fall gathering will ignite interest in current students to revive the choir.

The Gospel Lyres reunion and concert will be part of Homecoming & Family Weekend, and the group is working in partnership with the committee organizing the Black Alumni Reunion for that weekend as well.

Past Gospel Lyres members—and all who are interested—are welcome to join in the singing, reunion preparation, fundraising, or other support. Please contact Marteal at blessed1mhpitts@gmail.com.

Homecoming & Family Weekend information is at owu.edu/HFW.

Barbranda Lumpkins Walls ’79